The Royal Portfolio: The Liz Biden Collection

Liz Biden is someone who un­derstands that there’s nothing quite like the comfort of being at home. The seclusion, the privacy, and the quiet make a home the ultimate sanctuary from life’s familiar course. Realizing the captivating feeling a home can inspire, Liz Biden has grabbed the attention of the luxury travel industry by opening her opulent homes as private escapes to welcome South African adventurers.

In the late nineties, Liz and her husband, Phil, sold their shares of Jenni Button and left the South African fashion industry to turn one of their holiday homes into their first hotel, Royal Malewane. “It was a fit of madness,” recalls Liz. “I didn’t know anything about how to create or run hotels.” And yet, since January of 2000, Liz Biden and this bushveld hide­away have experienced fabulous recognition with awards like “Top 101 Best Spas in the World” from Tatler Spa Guide, a “Best Destinations” award from Forbes Maga­zine, and one of the “Top 57 Hot Spots in the World” by Condé Nast Traveler.

With so much confidence from Royal Malewane, Liz promptly turned her beach house into her second hotel, Birkenhead House, and her wine farm into her third hotel, La Residence. Similar to Royal Malewane, both of these hotels have also received incredible reviews including Birkenhead’s appearance on Condé Nast Traveler’s Hotlist in 2003 and La Resi­dence’s recent “Hideaway of the Year” award from Andrew Harper’s Hideaway Report in 2009.

Each of the Royal Portfolio properties is known for its own individual identity. Liz has stayed away from joining group hotels and has spent a large amount of time in the unique and eclectic decor of her homes. “I have traveled all over the world and so I put together all the things that I have loved and enjoyed in other places,” says Liz.

Liz’s Birkenhead House is a rare sight, seated on the cliffs of Hermanus overlooking the Atlantic Ocean. A unique collection of inspired artwork, elegant chandeliers, and ocean view vistas are just a few of the marvels at this waterfront property. Her wine estate, La Residence, is known for its spectacular Tuscany villa feel, with ornate mirrors, lighting, artworks, and dressers. Set in the beautiful Franschhoek Valley, La Residence offers mountain vineyard vistas and nothing short of spectacular mountain views, beautiful sunsets, and estate-like grandeur. The exquisite Royal Malewane getaway lies among the untamed African bush and offers the sophistication and elegance of rich deckwood, Ralph-Lauren linens, and spillway pool waters. As there are only six suites at Royal Malewane, these luxurious accommodations also offer incomparable solitude. Additionally, Liz has one of only two scouts in the country on her staff, along with the only working master tracker, who helps guests to find some of the most spectacular wildlife in South Africa. She furnished her latest addition at Royal Malewane, Africa House, with 20 tables, windows, and even carved teak beds from Mombasa and Lamu. “When I see fabulous pieces, I buy them and we build the place around them.”

Liz has loved every minute of her role in creating the Royal Portfolio. “It has been such a joy to pour my heart into them and it has been even more rewarding to see the wonderful customers enjoy them so much.”

To experience the world-class hospitality of the Royal Portfolio hotels in Ker & Downey style, contact your Travel Professional or visit www.kerdowney.com.

Well-Guided Safari: Catching Up with Doug Wright

BESPOKE Magazine’s Special Edition highlighting the Best of Africa will be available for download later this month. Preview some of the magazine below as Ker & Downey catches up with Doug Wright, our long-standing favorite guide in Botswana.

The safari business has evolved over the past half century just as all businesses have evolved. In the days of Hemingway, a safari was a several months-long production with porters, cooks, gun-bearers, and trackers with the Professional Hunter heading up the whole affair. The job of the Professional Hunter in those days was not only to locate big game for his clients, but also to entertain and educate his clients on anything from the cherished ritual of manhood for young Masaai males to the annual flood cycle of the Okavango Delta. He was an educator and a protector, the guru who knew the telltale signs that indicated when one could approach these elephants or those lions on foot. At the end of the day, he could entertain with stories of the bush around a campfire and a G and T.

Today’s safari guide is much the same. He should be someone who has spent a lifetime in the bush, knowing and understanding all things flora and fauna. Within hours of meeting his clients, a safari guide should be able to determine his clients’ fitness level in the case of trekking for gorillas or know when the clients prefer to do a walking safari. He will have a wonderful ability to get children and teenagers involved and away from their smartphone. In short, today’s private safari guide is someone who will make this experience special for every member of the group regardless of age or gender. One such safari guide is Doug Wright.

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Ker & Downey’s Best of Botswana

It’s improbably that once country about the size of Texas could contain two of the world’s most extreme – and extremely beautiful – ecosystems. But there they are in the Kalahari Desert of northern Botswana, no more than a 90-minute plane ride apart: the Makgadigadi Pans and the Okavango Delta.

 Written by: Gary Walther & Scott Goetz

Here’s a look at four of our favorite camps in safari country:

San Camp, Makgadikgadi Pans

A remote Africa experience

A full moon beams with klieg light intensity onto the Makgadikgadi Pans, the largest salt pan complex in the world. It’s well after sunset and while I should be concerned about the dangers haunting this barren landscape, I am too awestruck by the ethereal light reflecting off the white crusty earth and onto all that surrounds me. Night has magically turned to day and in this vast, flat emptiness the size of Switzerland, beauty is heightened by the immensity of nothingness.

As a travel writer and African expert, I am often asked what are my favorite places. When I say Uncharted Africa’s Jack’s and San Camps in Botswana, I know to expect the dreaded ‘why?’ The desert is not what most people think of when dreaming of the ultimate African experience surely, but that ‘why’ is a very difficult question to answer. For no matter which anecdote I elaborate or how clearly I explain my feelings, I fail to convey the profound power of this place – a power that most everyone who ventures here discovers.

I recently returned to Makgadikgadi, ecstatic to be one of the first to experience the new San Camp, and this time I had brought award-winning filmmaker Michael Southard, to shoot a web series that takes viewers on Africa’s Ultimate Journeys. We land. There it is ahead of me. The seemingly dead and lifeless crusty earth. Oh no, seemingly dead? How do we visually capture something so alive if it looks seemingly dead on film? I couldn’t define what it is in a description. Strapped into the plane seat, I freeze and wonder if the reason was that… well…maybe it wasn’t that great? Was I a fool to love this lunar no-man’s land for all these years? This place…Over all the other fantastic possibilities in Africa? I unbuckle my seat, dangling on the edge of terror.

Over the three day stay, excursions lead us into the various aspects of life in the Makgadikgadi, each reveling another fragment of this area’s ancient puzzle: a trip to a 3,500 year old Baobab tree couples history with botanical wonder; a full-throttle quad ride affords a thrilling understanding of the pans limitlessness; a field trip interacting with meerkats, sparks thoughts on social communication; a walk with the Bushmen presents the oldest living culture on the planet and allows for an ancestral connection that goes back as far as ape turning to man. Discovery upon discovery, the pieces stack up with a collective intensity.

It didn’t take long before Michael succumbs to the wide-eyed wonder I first experienced when I came here. Suddenly, it’s clear. What instills the solid connection to the place is the legendary Bousfield passion for Africa, a family legacy, handed down through six generations, that finds home in the heart of all who come here. Every moment is a desert passion play, Africa’s version of a Hollywood movie premiere and San Camp, luminous in her tented elegance, is Botswana’s new leading lady.

Accommodation: A maximum of 12 guests are accommodated in six large walk-in white canvas tents on slightly elevated wooden platforms with pri­vate facilities. The tents have running water and flush toilets, plus a bucket shower. These facilities are private but are approximately nine to thirteen feet from the tent.

Activities: Day and night game drives, both day and night, quad bike safaris, meerkat adventures, San Bushmen experiences, star gazing, birding during wet season, bush walks, and Kubu Island quad bike activities

Zarafa Camp, Selinda Reserve

For the conservationist

The full moon has spread a smoky sheen across the Zibandianja Lagoon, making it look as if it were filled with dry ice. Out there—and not very far out there—the pod of hippos that bivouac right offshore is providing a little night music, belching, bickering, grunting, and snorting their way toward sunrise. They’re the lagoon’s Beta House.

Whereas in here, a 1,000-square-foot tent, all is refined artifice–scroll-arm button-tufted couch, leather planter’s chairs, claw-foot copper tub, and a savannah of Persian carpet. It’s a safari-drawing-room-under-canvas, one of the four that make up Zarafa, built just two years ago and easily among the most luxurious camps in the Delta today.

The camp’s creators, Dereck and Beverly Joubert, are wildlife photographers and filmmakers by trade and environ-mentalists by passion. The camp sits on the first place the Jouberts ever camped together, “so we’re in love with the location,” says Dereck. The duo has won all the big awards in their field (five Emmys, a Peabody, and a Wildscreen Panda), and most recently they garnered a Best Achievement in Science, Nature and Technology Emmy for their film “Eye of the Leopard.” Their latest project, in conjunction with National Geographic, is the Big Cat Initiative, which aims to halt the drastic decline in the numbers of lion, leopard, and chee­tah. (You can sign up at www.nation­algeographic.com/bigcats.)

The Jouberts envision Zarafa as a green beacon, proof that sybaritic and sustainable can go hand-in-hand. “Zarafa,” says Dereck, is “a laboratory for conservation tourism, a showcase.” Thus, the camp runs completely on solar power, courtesy of 136 Sanyo panels that provide electricity 24 hours a day. “I had to browbeat the designers into that one,” recalls Dereck. “Now we fire up the generator once a month just to see if it works.” All of the construc­tion materials were chosen through an environmental audit. The floors, decking, and headboards (designed by Dereck) are made of disused teak railroad ties from South Africa. He also designed the furniture, sleek renditions of classic safari pieces, and had them made in the Philip­pines out of Indonesian mahogany uprooted by the 2004 tsunami. The land rovers are powered by cooking oil, the glassware is manufactured in Swaziland out of recycled Coca-Cola bottles, and the sewage system uses bacteria to do the dirty work. It’s in­geniously green.

The Zibandianja Lagoon teems with life. It’s astonishing how many species can be seen from the tent or main deck of the common area. Just after dawn, heralded by the madcap call of Red-billed Francolins, sacred ibis rise from the reeds and vec­tor off to their feeding grounds. Vervet monkeys splash down onto the low branches above the camp’s dining area. One day at lunch, 14 elephants congregate on the lagoon shore, about 100 yards away. Lining up nose to tail, they wade in and proceed to bathe, horse around, and devour lagoon grass by furling it with their trunks as deftly as an Italian twirls linguine onto a fork. In the evening, red lechwe gather in the shallows, their russet coats burnished by the sun’s slant rays. Of course, twice a day you go farther afield on game drives, armed with a Canon 40D digital camera and a pair of telephoto lenses supplied by the camp. Is that a cool amenity or what?

At Zarafa, you get the luxury of space—a three-room expanse to live in, not just a place to kill time between game drives. The staff and food are first rate, and the loca­tion is an orchestra seat on all the goings-on out in the lagoon. But the bottom line is that by staying here you’re underwriting a vision.

Accommodation: The camp is designed with exclusivity and privacy at its core. Each tent is positioned on the forest’s edge, rimming the shores of the floodplains and savannas and far from a neighbor. There are only four tents at the luxurious Zarafa Camp, with unobstructed view across the Zibandianja Lagoon and earthy construction. Each of the tents is decorated with custom-made furniture, leathers, and handcrafted recycled woods.

Activities: Traditional game drives, elevated hides, and bush walks

Vumbura Plains, Okavango Delta

Safari Luxe

What’s in a name? In Vumbura’s case, there isn’t nearly enough.

To convey the diversity of its 160,618-acre concession, the lodge would have to be called Vumbura Plains, Savannahs, Swamps, Acacia Belt, and Teak Woodlands.

Granted, every game lodge has a variety of landscape, but Vumbura’s location, in the north astride the Linyanti and Okavango systems, gives it a wider habitat spectrum than most lodges. For proof, you need only look at the antelope on view: from the swamp dwelling sitatunga to the teak woodland-loving sable, to name the extremes. In between there are tessebe and zebra on the floodplains, kudu and impala in the acacias, and steenbok and roan in the mopane forests. The lodge offers a variety of activities—drives, walks, mokoro and motor boat excursions, and helicopter flights—so guests can take it all in. Vumbura breaks the mold when it comes to accommodation, too, eschewing the traditional game lodge vocabulary (hut, thatch, hardwood) in favor of very clean, geometric pavilions bedded between grand wild fig and jackalberry trees. The delicate palette of soft greens, blues, taupe, grays, and elephant-hide browns subtly reflect the palette of the landscape. The bold play of materials (rag rugs, beaded beanbag chairs), shapes (fiberglass coffee tables that resemble giant pebbles), and architectural elements (built-in couches and beds and blond, sandblasted pine planking as the primary building material) might make you think of northern California.

The architecture perfectly suits the camp’s location on the edge of the Kaparota Lagoon. The chalets have been designed to minimize the divide between out and in, with mosquito-net paneling and sliding panels of shade cloth used for walls.

This lends the living and bedrooms a kind of IMAX-theatre-on-the-lagoon feel. You experience the ultimate lazy man’s birdwatching by propping yourself up on a pillow in bed at dawn and waiting for the avian day to get underway. Each of the seven chalets has a plunge pool and spacious adjoining relaxation area, a sala (a thatched, outdoor pavilion furnished with daybeds), and outdoor shower (in addition to the full en-suite bathroom).

Vumbura is the lodge for those who want a more modern approach to staying in the bush while seeing a sterling cross-section of habitat and wildlife.

Accommodation: Vumbura Plains Camp comprises two sepa­rate seven-roomed satellite camps, each with its own raised dining, lounge and bar area tucked beneath a canopy of cool, shady, in­digenous trees. Magnificent vistas across the Okavango Delta floodplains are a feature. A star-gazing deck with comfortable cushions protrudes into the floodplain, a place to gaze upwards, or a convivial camp fire setting.

Activities: Traditional game drives, night drives, bush walks, and mokoro excursions

Shinde Camp, Okavango Delta

Classic Adventure

The cast savannahs surrounding Shinde are a great stage for wildlife. They reveal the dynamic of the Delta, as you see how various species have carved out a particular niche and you watch them interact with other types of game.

That became clear to me the morning we pulled up at the edge of a plain that still contained a fair amount of water, although the dry season was well along. Nearby, a herd of red lechwe, the most common antelope in the Delta, grazed placidly, quite happy to ignore us.

Farther back, a flight of 30 or so open-billed storks light­ly dropped to the ground like a squadron of black-clad parachutists. The air was filled with the tink-tink-tink of touchy blacksmith plovers, and all at once six car­mine bee-eaters splashed color all over a leafless mopane tree.

And then, as if a director shouted “action,” a troupe of baboon entered, stage left, and proceeded to cross the standing water. They kept coming and coming- -there were perhaps 50 of them, mothers carrying babies on their backs and big males keeping the young ones in line. Our guide Paul said they were skittish because they don’t like getting wet—indeed, some hopscotched through the pool on their hind legs–and because they were worried that the water harbored crocodiles.

And we didn’t have to do a thing but sit in the land rover and take it all in.

Shinde also has a watery side, sitting right on Shinde Lagoon as labyrinthine as Venice. It has broad boulevards and enormous piaz­zas of water, and by-ways a little wider than a rowboat, with tiny aqueous alleyways jutting off them into the expanses of papyrus. The la­goon takes on a special atmosphere at sunset with the sky shot with the setting sun and the papyrus growing dusky.

This is the time of day when you might get very lucky and see one of the Delta’s shyest species, the sitatunga. A tiny antelope, the sitatunga has evolved to live in the half-land and half-water world of the Delta. It has a wa­terproof coat, and is actually better at walk­ing on squishy terrain than dry land. One of the best things to do at Shinde is take a game walk. “Doing a game drive is like watching a movie of nature,” said Paul, “whereas do­ing a walk is like reading a book of nature.” And he proceeded to do just that, becoming a Sherlock Holmes of the Delta, looking at a patch of ground and reading a story from it. “What’s unusual about these elephant prints?” he asked. When we’re stumped, he points out that there are only two prints because el­ephants plant their rear feet right on the spot they’ve touched with their front ones. Then he gave us the formula for calcu­lating the height of an elephant from its print: the circumference times two.

We also got a lesson in identifying game by their droppings. Giraffe leave hard little pellets; zebra dung is mostly grass, good for starting a campfire; and the hippo drops a tight, light ball that can be used for a pickup game of soccer.

Shinde is one of the older camps in the Delta. The fact that the common areas are raised above the ground and con­nected by boardwalks gives the place a treehouse feel. The eight tents are tradi­tional in layout, much more rustic than luxe—a more old-time Africa. And isn’t that one of the things you come all this way to discover?

Accommodation: Shinde is nestled on a lush palm-dotted island in the heart of the northern Okavango Delta. Located at the edge of a lagoon, it is surrounded by clear waterways, which flow over yellow sands and past palm-fringed is­lands teeming with birdlife and game. Delight in the best game viewing and bird watching in some of the most luxurious surroundings in the Delta.

Activities: Mokoro glides in the delta, fishing, 4×4 game drives, bush walks, and bird watching

For more information about customizing your own journey with Ker & Downey to Botswana or any other destination, contact your travel professional or visit us on the web at www.kerdowney.com

Namibia: The Great Adventure

The arid land of Namibia, a forgotten country when it comes to safari, has emerged from oblivion into the forefront of adventure travel, catching the eyes of explorers, culturists, luxury travelers, and even Matt Lauer of NBC’s Today Show along the way. Take an extraordinary journey with Ker & Downey to find out what has made it so popular.

The country of Namibia, named after the vast Namib desert (the oldest on the planet), is celebrated for its wide open landscapes – a perfect place to breathe deeply while taking in the infinite supply of blue skies, sun-drenched weather, and cool starry nights. The diversity of nature, from red sand dunes to blue ocean water, creates an interesting juxtaposition as it surrounds the outlying cities.

National parks and game reserves only add to the collage of wildlife as giraffes saunter across the white Etosha Pan, gemsbok traverse up and down the dunes of Sossusvlei, and seals congregate on the western shores at Skeleton Coast.

Ker & Downey’s Discover Namibia is a great way to explore it all. With plenty of activity from safari to relaxation, this journey encompasses wildlife, beautiful landscapes, preserved culture, and ultimate style.

The Namibian adventure includes trips to Sossusvlei, Damara­land, the Skeleton Coast, and the great white Etosha Pan. If you saw “Where in the World is Matt Lauer?” on the Today Show in November 2011, you saw Lauer slaloming down the iconic dunes of Sossusvlei to kick off his tenth annual five-day whirlwind jaunt around the world.

Home to the impressive red sand dunes and the Namib Naukluft National Park, Sossusvlei is a must-see destination for photog­raphers and adrenaline junkies. “The geography of the place is simply astounding,” says David Jones, Ker & Downey vice presi­dent. The Namib is considered the world’s oldest living desert, a precarious place for life to thrive. Salty Atlantic seas are not fit to drink, but plants and desert-adapted animals are sustained by the mist that drifts in from the turbulent coast, using each droplet of moisture to its fullest.

The scene from the main deck of Kulala Desert Lodge is impres­sive, comprised of unobstructed views of the vast sand sea and a watering hole attracting gemsbok, springbok, ostrich, and jackal. The individual tents are elevated canvas and thatch “kulalas” – meaning “to sleep” in Oshiwambo – and sleep you will, either in the breezy open-air bedroom or on the rooftop bedroll beneath the thousands of glittering pinpricks in the Namibian sky. Bal­looning is one of the best ways guests can take in the expanse of the dunes. Embark early to watch the region come to life and the sands change color as the sun rises.

The infamous Skeleton Coast is known for its scattered remains of shipwrecks and thousands of Cape fur seals. When the first European explorers landed on this unforgiving coast, they dubbed it “The Sands of Hell.” Many mariners of old lived through a wreck in the treacherous waters only to perish in the desert beyond. Even with modern technologies and safety precautions, ships today can still find themselves caught in the impenetrable fog and constant surge of waves, tossing them into one of the many jagged offshore rocks or shifting sand bars. Wrecked and rusted hulls pepper the coast, constantly weathered by the salty winds, standing half buried and waiting to eventually become one with the sand as dust. Faded ships aren’t the only skeletons you’ll find here – the massive bleached bones of whales stand as painful reminders of the days of mass whaling. Built 12 miles from the coast on an island in the dry Khumib riverbed, the Skeleton Coast Camp comprises Meru-style en-suite tents and provides a luxurious refuge to the visitors of the Skeleton Coast. This beautifully desolate region can be seen by taking drives in 4×4 vehicles, darting in and out of the windswept plains, towering canyons, and wide salt pans.

Damaraland lies in the northwestern region of Na­mibia, folded in by mountain ranges and cut through by rivers, including the northern Kuene. The mountains of Damaraland are home to some of Africa’s best rock etchings, with UNESCO World Heritage Site Twyfel­fontein comprising a host of over 2,000 animal and human figures carved and painted across the rock. Situated in the Huab River Valley, Damaraland Camp is a contemporary eco-friendly destination of elevated thatch-roofed abodes with private decks and endless vistas over the rocky desert. Though animals do not congregate close to camp year round, skilled guides and trackers ferry guests throughout the gravel plains that are home to Hartmann’s mountain zebra, giraffe, black rhino, and the truly unique desert-adapted elephants. Though no different genetically from their cousins elsewhere in Africa, these desert dwellers can travel much greater distance on less sustenance to be able to survive in the harsh conditions.

Etosha National Park is a rare sight of large salt pans and slight depressions carved by the powerful winds. Although life here is harsh, the area is one of Africa’s largest game reserves and is considered Namibia’s premier wildlife destination. Adapted elephant, wildebeest, springbok, and gemsbok, along with 340 species of bird, gather at the outlying springs and waterholes. This is one of the few places in Africa where visitors can also see black rhino and white rhino living together in the same region. Stay within Etosha’s confines at the incredibly exclusive Little Ongava, a retreat with only three suites, a private plunge pool and private decks for each suite.

Not only does Namibia have unique geography, it also has a one-of-a-kind culture. The Himba people of the northwest are one of the last semi-nomadic peoples on earth. Leading pastoral lifestyles, the Himba tend goats and cattle and have remained unaffected by westernization due to their isolation. The Himba women are known for their intricate hairstyles and beautiful jewelry. Most Himba wear little clothing and use a fragrant mixture of red ochre and fat rubbed on their bod­ies, giving them a distinct red appearance.

A great confluence of opposites, the forgotten country of Namibia has much to offer for adven­turers, culturists, and travelers alike.

To take Ker & Downey’s Discover Namibia journey or customize your own trip to Namibia or any other destination, contact your Travel Professional or visit www.kerdowney.com.

Wonders of Tanzania

Discover Tanzania, an East African nation where the majesty of the Serengeti meets the temperate shores of the Indian Ocean. Featured in Wonders of Tanzania, sun and sand take center stage in this island paradise.

Ker & Downey presents this region as a vintage safari with a twist, meandering through diverse landscape and seeing ample undisturbed wildlife before finally indulging in beach­side luxury.

The Tanzanian journey begins in Arusha, an area famous for its robust coffee crops. Arusha Coffee Lodge occupies a corner of the Burka coffee estate, a fully operational coffee plantation with roasters and fermentation facilities on site. Guests can indulge in the blends and observe the roasting process before traveling onward to the Tarangire National Park and Oliver’s Camp. This camp is a fitting introduction to the Tanzanian wild with just the right balance of bush luxury and classic safari grit. In the distance Lake Manyara, Ngorongoro, and the Great Rift Valley are visible from camp, all anticipated bullet points on the itinerary.

Slow down first at Oliver’s Camp whose seasoned camp at­tendants include wildlife wizards. Guides and rangers excel at distinguishing between the specific families of lion and sorting out individual pride members from the throng, their characteristics and personalities memorized. Game drives will net sightings of elephant, hyena and several different big cats. Oliver’s is best known for walking safaris, an activity that not long ago was forbidden by the park authorities. Set off on foot, flanked by a skilled guide and ranger, to stealthily observe the Tarangire’s inhabitants in their natural surround­ings. Extend the experiential safari and include a fly camping excursion, turning a few hours’ walk into an unforgettable day of up-close game viewing and sleeping in the solitude of the wilderness. Tents at camp are well-appointed with an incredible outdoor shower with a view and plush furnishings inside. Stroll the lantern-lit grounds and dine at the banquet table with the camp family of guides, rangers and other guests, ending the evening with conversation around the campfire – an activity affectionately nicknamed “Bush TV.” The paths that wind through the grounds are raked every evening and visitors wake to a surprise sandy tapestry of animal tracks weaving throughout the area.

Depart Tarangire and take in a private game drive over lunch at the intimate and exclusive Lake Manyara National Park. Manyara’s shallow waters attract a variety of herbivores including hippos, impala, elephant, giraffe and wildebeest. En route to the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, keep watch in the surrounding branches for the famous tree-climbing lions. With a constant water supply and varied terrain, the area around the stunning Ngorongoro Crater remains rich and diverse in game year-round. A Dutch colonial-chic personality defines The Manor at Ngorongoro with whitewashed cottages standing stark and crisp against the green of the impeccable gardens. Soak in views of the Tanzanian bush from the manor and journey by off-road vehicle or bike into the crater for a closer look at the activity on the 100-square-mile crater floor. Named a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1979, the Ngorong­oro Conservation Area is heralded as one of the most spectac­ular places for game viewing in all of Africa, particularly in the crater. From the petite dik dik to the massive black rhinoceros, an estimated 25,000 big game residents – the Big Five among them – are living on the plains or in the swamps. Trek to the Olduvai Gorge, located nearby on the plains of the Great Rift Valley, where excavations have yielded important clues into the lives of prehistoric humans.

The famed Serengeti National Park is next, existing on the Kenyan border and home to the annual mammalian spectacle known as the Great Migration. From October to April, grab a front-row seat to the Great Migration from Sayari Camp’s prominent position on the Mara River. Watch as herds of big game grazers – including wildebeest, zebra and antelope – follow the rains across the Mara with predators in hot pursuit, hoping to exploit the weaker trav­elers. Sayari is a superb slice of luxury on the vast plains, featuring 15 deluxe tents with breezy verandas, en-suite facilities and the distinction of a five-star hotel experience in the wilderness — a far cry from a typical, more rugged tented camp. Beyond the grounds, discover all the wonders and wildlife of the Serengeti. As the only permanent camp in this region of the park, Sayari remains isolated and quiet, removed from the maddening tourism traffic. Game drives will reveal the diverse inhabitants of the plains and the towering kopje rock formations, including the Simba Kopje, a landmark that is often credited as the inspiration for the fictional Pride Rock seen in the animated feature The Lion King.

End the Tanzanian adventure with exceptional seaside opulence on the islands of Zanzibar. Sun and sand take center stage in this island paradise, showcasing a heritage steeped in spices and warmed by the Indian Ocean. A good portion of the world’s cloves, nutmeg, cinnamon and pepper originate on these islands and guests in the region can tour the plantations and facilities where sumptuous spices are still produced. Experience the island nation from the secluded Matemwe Lodge, located on the white sand beaches of Zanzibar’s main island, Unguja. Local materials and verdant gardens set off the 12 bungalows, each with its own veranda overlooking the Indian Ocean.

Aside from luxuriating in Matemwe’s oasis of sand and sea, guests can look forward to experiencing the pristine natu­ral wonders of the island. The crystal-clear waters, with impressive coral formations found on the nearby Mnemba Atoll, are a thrill for divers. An array of marine life can be found as well with dolphins residing year-round and hump­back whales passing through from July to September. On a hike through the Jozani Forest, guests will spy the Zanzi­bar red colobus, a primate with distinctly different mark­ings and calls than those of its mainland colobus cousin. Zanzibar ends the journey with a choice of energetic activities and leisurely moments, leaving visitors with fond memories of their privileged trek.

For more information about Wonders of Tanzania or any other Ker & Downey itinerary, contact your Travel Professional or visit www.kerdowney.com.

Haven on the Bay

Adrenaline-pumping adventure and beachside relaxation aren’t two things that typically go hand in hand; but on South Africa’s Gansbaai shores, Grootbos is making its mark in luxury travel by combing the two. 

While there may be a host of places along the South African coast that claim to be private escapes, none is quite as secluded as the exclusive Grootbos Private Nature Reserve. In fact, you won’t even know it’s there until you arrive at the front door. And while Grootbos is a truly secluded getaway, it’s unique in the fact that there are adventures here unlike any other in South Africa. This Eden of fynbos and milkwood trees is the perfect accompaniment to the ebb and flow of the Gansbaai tide, which is home to much more than meets the eye.

The Gansbaai offers a vantage point for one of the most spec­tacular sights in all of Africa, the Southern right whale. As adults, large baleen whales have an average size of approximately 50 feet long, and some grow even larger, with each female producing one calf in a three-year breeding cycle. But the best part about their annual habits is that they migrate to the sheltered bays of Grootbos to have their calves. In season, typically June to No­vember, Ker & Downey guests will get to experience the whales at Grootbos aboard the Whale Whisperer, a specialized sightsee­ing boat setting out from Grootbos to Dyer Island. Along the way, guests will have incredible photographic opportunities of not only the Southern right whale, but also the Humpback whale, Bryde’s whales, a sixty-thousand-strong Cape fur seal colony, and the African penguins. Trips are led by experienced marine guides who will share their knowledge, keeping a strong emphasis on the welfare and conservation of the animals, a real passion and cornerstone of Grootbos’ ideology.

And if whale watching isn’t adventurous enough, there’s also shark cage diving at Grootbos. As you venture out on the water with the experienced staff, your guides will throw a mixture known as “chum” overboard. This often-vile potion of fish and other food sources is like candy for the sharks, attracting them to the area around the boat. Once the shark is spotted and within a close distance, guests can choose to enter the shark cage attached to the side of the boat where they will come face to face with the most feared predator of the ocean without being in danger. Those that prefer to stay dry can still spot sharks from above the water as the boat provides excellent shark viewing for great photography.

But beyond all the adventure, what makes Grootbos such a cov­eted destination is its fabulous intertwining with five-star luxury. The two elegant eco-lodges, Garden and Forest, are an invitation to pampering with fireplaces, airy bedrooms, and wooden decks with spectacular sea views. There are extra length beds with down duvets and a private coffee facility and minibar. The lodge also boasts incredible cuisine. Led by Executive Chef Duane Lewis, Grootbos dining is crafted from the finest and freshest local ingredients, drawing inspiration from the abundance of scents and colors in nature around them. Lewis promises magical combinations that will replenish and inspire the body and soul.

Other activities include horseback riding or trail walking. A gal­lop or walk through the fynbos gardens may be just what’s need­ed after an adventurous day out on the water. For those who find inspiration in the lush vegetation, they will surely enjoy a trip to Green Futures, a unique project founded by the Grootbos Private Nature Reserve’s owners, the Lutzeyer family. With a vision to help people in local communities prosper self-sufficiently, Green Futures was established to train ”gardeners in the making” in the art of indigenous landscaping and conservation. Incorporating fynbos and other native plants into the public and private gardens on the Cape coast attracts native birds and adds effortlessly to the beautification of the region. At the school built on Grootbos’ grounds, 12 students each term learn their craft and cultivate the plants at the attached wholesale nursery, earning course credit for themselves and funds to be reinvested in the project. Future course offerings will include ecotourism, hospitality, and nature conservation, seeking to further ensure the future integrity of the region and the prosperity of its local communities.

Ker & Downey guests may choose to get their hands dirty with the students in the program by planting a milkwood or other na­tive tree in the Ker & Downey Forest. Whether staying at Groot­bos or not, a tree is planted here for each of our clients traveling to South Africa. Since September 2010, Ker & Downey clients have contributed trees to the lush landscape of the Grootbos Private Nature Reserve, helping to preserve its integrity for future generations of experiential travelers to enjoy.

To learn more about how you can take your next vacation to the Grootbos Private Nature Reserve, or any other destination, contact your Travel Professional or visit www.kerdowney.com.

Ker & Downey Added to the Signature Travel Network

Incentives for agents and amenities for clients will enhance the company’s top-shelf service.

HOUSTON, TEXAS, February 15, 2012 – Ker & Downey has joined the Signature Travel Network of top-tier travel providers and is now serving the over 375 agencies catering to clients seeking flawless, high-end and unique journeys. Signature agents can turn to Ker & Downey for highly customized itineraries and VIP services, providing their clients with experiential, luxury travel at its very best.

“We are looking forward to giving our partners the same level of service, now with the added bonus of Signature’s outstanding amenities and incentives,” says David Jones, Vice President of Ker & Downey. “Our clients and agent partners know us best for our custom service and luxury experience, and the partnership with Signature will help us become that much more exclusive.”

The Signature incentives and amenities are effective for all bookings after February 1, 2012. To learn more about Ker & Downey’s exclusive journeys, please visit our Destinations page.